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A Walk Through Brick City
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What an interesting walk! This article has been viewed 12738 times in the last 3 years Jamie: 15th Apr 2005 - 15:59 GMTi'm enjoying the purple hue of these photos peter. i found your article really interesting to read through, and i particularly like the way your linked in some other relevant newark posts. best of. Peter: 15th Apr 2005 - 16:03 GMTkelsey, heh! yeah, the strange reddish and purplish hues come from the cameraphone... i installed a hack to get better saturation (think: lomo-like cameraphone!) which, though drastically improving the resolution/saturation of the photos, causes those hues. but you know? i actually like em. i think it makes the photos look like oldskool polaroids or something... like, particularly the one of the empty field. Jamie: 15th Apr 2005 - 16:06 GMTYeh, it was really interesting to hear about the vacant lots. Made me think of the people that must once have lived there. Whole communities sweeped under the carpet. Post apocalyptic imagery Jamie: 15th Apr 2005 - 16:08 GMTKelsey! Swept goddamit. Swept! Man, my eloquence has taken a kick in the balls. I say down to write last night. I sat there with my laptop in my lap for a whole hour, finally i wrote one word on my screen. Cohesion. elaine: 15th Apr 2005 - 18:04 GMTwell I'm liking the lomo reference, and saving yourself the trouble joining the lomo set (and the money) but then I also like the idea of lo tec hi tec, which cameraphones kind of are by default. I do of course like having a zoom on my 'real' camera, but when I had an SLR I was almost bloody minded about using the 'real' lens, and i love scanners as cameras Jamie: 15th Apr 2005 - 20:21 GMTPeter has (had) a lomo lca. They rule but are expensive. I could never afford one and made do with a lowly smena 35 which was still pretty cool though. Peter, glad you like my recent writing. It has once again been buried under the mountain of other good stuff posted today. Have a few things in progress but have hit somewhat of a mental brick wall. Will read a good book to get the creative juices flowing. Peter: 15th Apr 2005 - 21:58 GMTyeah i got a lca years ago from a russian woman i used to work with for like $35... dont use it alot anymore as i do mostly digi now, but its fun at times... i think the cmeha35's are absolutely rad, too... and zorkis. i love those old weird cameras, for sure. but the lo-tech-hi-tech is fun too, totally. ive held scanners up before to get images of a room, heh... elaine: 16th Apr 2005 - 08:56 GMTand now you've made this...out of an old sqeezy bottle and some sticky backed plastic - as they would make everything out of in 'blue peter' the UK kids programme, how did you do it? this installing of the hacking? It enhances what is nice about the slight fisheye. When I was in brighton I bought an old camera for nostalgia's sake, which had one person two people three people or the mountains because I remember liking that wideangle thing, which the cameraphones have, and your colouration exaggerates sine: 17th Apr 2005 - 06:48 GMTjust the way the edges are rendered in the upper left, and the sky. crazy blue glass box. amazing.
Boricua BEast: 24th May 2005 - 13:33 GMTthat metal shipping container News Stand isnt on 12th Ave. It's on the Corner of Springfield AVe. and MLK blvd. junkie: 26th May 2005 - 01:12 GMT"It is the function of the artist to evoke the experience of surprised recognition: to show the viewer what he knows but does not know he knows. Helnwien is a master of surprised recognition." William S. Burroughs Peter: 21st Jun 2005 - 13:43 GMTtheyve painted the little magazine stop housed in teh shipping container:
Nerida: 2nd Nov 2005 - 20:55 GMTPeter i just stumbled across this site and have been looking at your photos...i really like your style, you capture what you see so well, there is so much distilled in every image. i feel like i just spent the night in a gallery! Peter: 2nd Nov 2005 - 21:23 GMTawesome! thanks. you can post some stuff of your own, you know, if you like ;) keith: 9th Jan 2006 - 01:47 GMTA lot of the photos you've posted are rich in history, not just the city's history but black history, American history. Those vacant lots in central ward used to be home to high-rise housing projects such as Stella Wright and Hayes Homes. The UMDNJ hospital that looks like a government building also has history tied to the housing crisis and 1967 race riots in central ward. David aka D-trigga: 16th Jan 2006 - 22:27 GMTYeeah i love Brick city pics. look out for ya boy Albom droppin out in o6 BLLLLLLLLLAt!!!!!!!! Brittany -bst: 16th Jan 2006 - 22:35 GMTThe first photo at the top of the page is a girl name candace. These phots are history and probally will be posted alot of other place but im sure in the feauture things are gonna get alot better in brick city. all of these pictures are all the pictures i saw. BRiCK CiTY LUVR: 15th Apr 2006 - 13:43 GMTBRiCK CiTY TiLL THE END!! NEWARK iS THE BEST!! HELLZ YEA! L0VE THE PiCS....REMiND ME OF WHAT I SEE EVERY MORNING! Gee-Nice, a Tru-Jerseyian...: 20th Apr 2006 - 16:16 GMTyou were'nt walking uptown on Raymond Ave., you're on Raymond Boulevard, are you even from Jersey? Gotta get it right, if you're representin' !!!! Whipslinger: 15th Jul 2006 - 09:27 GMTPeter, to cure your curiousity about all those vast vacant lots, they used to house 12 story clusters of housing projects with names like Prince St. and Hayes Homes and Scudder Homes etc. They were not the greatest of living conditions by far and have been razed to make way for all the new community building that has been taking place over the last few years. Some of those vacancies are also by products of the depression Newark sank into after the devastation of the Central Ward due to the 1967 riots. Finally Newark is bouncing back but just to inform you, Newark got the nickname "Brick City" because there were so many housing projects there. YOUNG JAE.N.NEWARK: 30th Sep 2006 - 21:00 GMTI MISS MA HOOD...MAN THOSE PICS BROUGHT BACK GOOD MEMORIES REGARDLESS IF DUDE WROTE WHICH WAY HE WAS GOIN WAS WROND AND IF HE AINT NOW WHERE DA NEWS STAND WAS POSTED I JUST REALLY ENJOYED SEEIN BRICK CITY..... crazy eddie: 23rd Nov 2006 - 20:43 GMTyo i really apreciate you showing everyone our city and what its become...the projects in the vacant lot pics were far to your left not rite there but good work....YOU CAN LEARN ALOT FROM A DUMMY !
Tammy: 5th Dec 2006 - 12:31 GMTLove the photo documentary. I work, go to school, and worship in Newark. It is a great city that has endured many injustices which gives new meaning to its nickname “Brick City"- its toughness and spirit of determination is fortifying. The city of Newark is a cultural Mecca and place of scholarly interest. noside: 28th Dec 2006 - 01:13 GMTbrick city come's from hawthorne ave the roots rap and the game ...leave it alone Jazmin: 25th Jan 2007 - 01:03 GMTI miss my bricks, man i had to move to da south.don worry imma come back. Jazmin: 25th Jan 2007 - 01:07 GMTanotha thing, aint no wher betta then Brick City. i hold alot of memories an no one can take my city down! upfromflames: 5th Apr 2007 - 05:28 GMTI was a little disappointed at your original presumption that the mysterious empty spaces in Newark once held decayed housing full of junkies. Actually, some of them used to contain thriving neighborhoods, some Italian white, some black. Many of those neighborhoods were torn down in a fit of urban renewal "slum" clearances that stretched on for almost two decades its unfortunate fits and starts that displaced more and more, leading to riots that further led the community on a downward spiral... still pretty bad, I hear. Now, I am not form Newark so I don't know like a local. But I did see this film that told the story... angela 6/12/07: 12th Jun 2007 - 17:19 GMTI have a friend from brick city and find the pictures sum up his stories of where he grew up. I have always been very curious of what Newark looked like, now I know. Thanks for taking your time to share with us. take care gunz: 12th Jul 2007 - 01:21 GMTi'm originally from newark why no pics of peshine ave jersey chicken berg clinton ave 16th street? Gata: 19th Jul 2007 - 15:51 GMTthe term "Brick City" originated in the Central Ward (most notably, Prince Street; a friend of mine coined the term) in the 70s-80s. It took a minute, but the term started to spread like crazy, and now it's a common nick for here. Believe me; I did my research on this. G-Rock: 18th Jan 2008 - 16:41 GMTInteresting. I always thought the name originated from the streets being paved with bricks. I love these pictures. There's a certain electricity in the air I feel the moment I get off the train in Newark. I'm so proud of where I'm from!! There's a certain level of respect for people from Brick City. To outsiders, it's a tough place; but for us it's home and it's come a long way baby. Mr. Jones: 27th Mar 2008 - 01:31 GMTYeah, The Bricks was bad, but in many ways it was surreal. Go back and read it's real history.Before the great migration and the riots.Even after that, boring could never be said about the city of my birth. I remember the national guard and the tanks of 67', the flavor of the streets still remained. If you didn't know the place your ass could be grass alright, but to all the fellas and ladies (even the night runners), it was the shit!!!, still is, we carry the pride, guts and determination not found in the average person. And before I go I will say this:Everywhere I have been and lived(Europe, 25 yrs. and the West coast, 2 yrs. ) the one thing that got me through everything was the thought of Newark, the people and the resiliency. Nobody believes me when I talk about The Bricks, but I do know this, seeing is believing. I wish I never left. P.S Newark will always separate the men from the boys. Mo: 19th May 2008 - 00:35 GMTNewark was my home..1958-1970. Grew up at 63 Mercer Street, Scudder Homes Projects - and a project it was, but it was home. Schools attended: Quitman, Robert Treat. If it wasn't for having close family ties..don't know if my life would be the same. Blessings to Newark. Comment on this article..[previous] :: [next] |
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